Yes.
Terminating numbers are decimal representations of rational numbers. Nonterminating numbers may or may not be rational numbers.
Some rational numbers are whole numbers, some are not. The set of whole numbers is a proper subset of rational numbers.
There are infinitely many rational numbers between any two consecutive rational numbers. This is because rational numbers can be expressed as fractions, and between any two fractions, an infinite number of other fractions can be found by taking the average of the two given fractions. Therefore, the set of rational numbers is dense, meaning there is no smallest gap between any two rational numbers.
all rational numbers can be written as fractions. That is the definition of rational numbers.
There are infinitely many rational numbers between any two rational rational numbers (no matter how close).
If there are no numbers after the 9 it is rational
No. Rational numbers are numbers that can be written as a fraction. All rational numbers are real.
The set of rational numbers includes all whole numbers, so SOME rational numbers will also be whole number. But not all rational numbers are whole numbers. So, as a rule, no, rational numbers are not whole numbers.
Rational numbers are numbers that can be written as a fraction. Irrational numbers cannot be expressed as a fraction. All natural numbers are rational.
6.6 is rational. Rational numbers are numbers that can be written as a fraction. Irrational numbers cannot be expressed as a fraction.
The set of rational numbers includes the set of natural numbers but they are not the same. All natural numbers are rational, not all rational numbers are natural.
All rational numbers are not whole numbers, as rational numbers can include fractions.
They do not. There is no relationship between rational numbers and rational decisions.
All rational numbers are real numbers.
A.(Integers) (Rational numbers)B.(Rational numbers) (Integers)C.(Integers) (Rational numbers)D.(Rational numbers) (Real numbers)
Find the arithmetic average of the two rational numbers. It will be a rational number and will be between the two numbers.
yes * * * * * No. Rational and irrational numbers are two DISJOINT subsets of the real numbers. That is, no rational number is irrational and no irrational is rational.